While that may sound simple, your citizenship plans could hit a snag if none of your friends are eligible to vouch for you.
Who can verify your identity for Australian citizenship?
On top of all that, they need to have known you for at least a year, and be currently working in one of these 39 professions:
- Australian consular or diplomatic officer
- Bailiff
- Bank officer
- Building society officer
- Chiropractor
- Clerk of court
- Commissioner for Affidavits
- Commissioner for Declarations
- Credit union officer
- Dentist
- Fellow of the National Tax and Accountants’ Association
- Finance company officer
- Judge of a court
- Justice of the peace
- Legal practitioner
- Magistrate
- Marriage celebrant
- Master of a court
- Medical practitioner
- Member of Chartered Secretaries Australia
- Member of Engineers Australia (students excepted)
- Member of the Association of Taxation and Management Accountants
- Member of the Australian Defence Force
- Member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia, the Australian Society of Certified Practicing Accountants, or the Institute of Public Accountants
- Member of the federal, state or territory parliaments, or a local government authority
- Minister of religion
- Nurse
- Optometrist
- Permanent employee of a Commonwealth, state or local government authority
- Permanent employee of Australia Post
- Pharmacist
- Physiotherapist
- Police officer
- Psychologist
- Registered migration agent
- Registrar, or deputy registrar, of a court
- Sheriff
- Teacher at a school or tertiary education institution (must be full-time)
- Veterinary surgeon
If you’re applying for citizenship for a child under six years old, the person verifying their identity can have known them for less than 12 months.
What if you’re not living in Australia when you apply?
They also can’t be related to you by birth, marriage or de facto relationship, and must currently be working in one of the 39 previously listed professions.
How much does it cost to apply for Australian citizenship?
Those not applying for citizenship by descent or adoption are considered to be applying by conferral.
If you don’t need to sit the citizenship test, you may need to have an interview with the Department of Home Affairs. They will contact you if that’s the case.
How hard is the Australian citizenship test?
To pass the Australian citizenship test, you need to:
- answer 20 multiple-choice questions
- get all five of the questions about Australian values correct, and
- achieve an overall mark of at least 75 per cent.
But among the recommendations in the recent Multicultural Framework Review was for the government to consider providing the test in languages other than English, as well as in alternative and more accessible formats.
How long do citizenship applications take to be processed?
For citizenship by descent, 50 per cent of applicants receive a decision within 79 days, and 90 per cent within five months.
Source Agencies